nigozeroichi--disqus
Project 2501
nigozeroichi--disqus

I know I'm in the minority here, even among people who aren't already enthralled with all things Christopher Nolan, but I just couldn't get myself to like this film. It has everything I hate about Nolan, albeit not in the extremes of his later movies: It is painfully humorless and feels off-puttingly bloodless. Its

I dunno, if you think South Park's libertarian slant is somehow a new thing maybe you should go back and watch some of the early seasons again, e.g. the episode with the underpants gnomes and the coffee shop that mocks critics of big business. And I say this as someone who agrees that the show has become painfully

I dunno, if you think South Park's libertarian slant is somehow a new thing maybe you should go back and watch some of the early seasons again, e.g. the episode with the underpants gnomes and the coffee shop that mocks critics of big business. And I say this as someone who agrees that the show has become painfully

Bullshit. South Park was my youth. It's precisely because I love what it used to be so much that I'm so disappointed by what it is now. And South Park absolutely has been in gradual decline since season 8.

Bullshit. South Park was my youth. It's precisely because I love what it used to be so much that I'm so disappointed by what it is now. And South Park absolutely has been in gradual decline since season 8.

That was the only genuinely clever scene in this episode. The fact that only the characters with impeded speech can understand what Butters is trying to say, but have to spend like half a minute trying to communicate it to everybody else in the room was pretty funny.

That was the only genuinely clever scene in this episode. The fact that only the characters with impeded speech can understand what Butters is trying to say, but have to spend like half a minute trying to communicate it to everybody else in the room was pretty funny.

What? The only bit in the episode that gave any indication as to their feelings on either candidate was the "Romney would've been harder on China" bit, which presumably was intended as a jab at Obama.

What? The only bit in the episode that gave any indication as to their feelings on either candidate was the "Romney would've been harder on China" bit, which presumably was intended as a jab at Obama.

You have no idea how relieved I am to find out that I'm not the only one who believes this

You have no idea how relieved I am to find out that I'm not the only one who believes this

Pretty sure the duck was not meant to represent Romney, especially since they have a real-life photograph of Romney in the same episode. Also, if the duck was meant to be Romney they would have called him by name. South Park isn't big on subtlety.

Pretty sure the duck was not meant to represent Romney, especially since they have a real-life photograph of Romney in the same episode. Also, if the duck was meant to be Romney they would have called him by name. South Park isn't big on subtlety.

I've asked myself this same question as I've become increasingly disillusioned with the last few seasons, but when I go back and rewatch some of the classic episodes and Matt and Trey's old-school stuff I realize that, no, it's not just me, they actually have gotten worse.

I've asked myself this same question as I've become increasingly disillusioned with the last few seasons, but when I go back and rewatch some of the classic episodes and Matt and Trey's old-school stuff I realize that, no, it's not just me, they actually have gotten worse.